Does AACHEN Provide the Missing Urban Splendor for the Early Middle

Does AACHEN Provide the Missing Urban Splendor for the Early Middle

69 Does AACHEN provide the missing urban splendor for the Early Middle Ages? For 300 years, Ravenna basically only shows San Salvatore ad Calchi – with a layout that fits the architectural styles of the 2nd/3rd or the 5th/ 6th century – in an otherwise ghostly wasteland. Ravenna's vivarium, although also dated in the 8th/9th century, does not help either, because structurally it resembles nymphaea of the 2nd/3rd century (Cerelli 2019, 294). But alas, Aachen also disappoints. For the 300 years of the Early Middle Ages, there are only Carolingian administrative buildings and one church. Early medieval wasteland of downtown AACHEN (8th-10th century AD), lacking residential quarters, latrines, streets, and baths etc., from which the monuments of Charlemagne stand out in splendid isolation. The small structures in the model represent primitive huts sunk into the dark earth (“dunkler Moder”) separating the High Middle Ages (10th/11th c. AD) from Roman civilization. [Photo G. Heinsohn from a video in Aachen's Centre Charlemagne with permission of the staff (2015). The video's co- author, Sebastian Ristow, points out that he plans to develop the model further; see also https://www.medieval.eu/charlemagne-aachen-2014/.] 70 Contemporary roads and latrines, housing for citizens and servants, lodgings for the warrior guards, stables, monasteries, water pipes, baths, parks for the peacocks, etc. have never been found. The famous monuments of Aachen protrude out of a death zone like broken teeth, reminding posterity of the magnificence of the once classically beautiful dentition: “Surprisingly, no excavation or construction site observation inside or outside the old town of Aachen has so far recorded clear settlement remains of Carolingian times, although tradition suggests the presence of merchants and numerous inhabitants as well as the existence of quite sophisticated aristocratic courts, some of whose buildings and material culture should be found in the ground. All previous claims about the road system, settlement structure and boundaries of this settlement are based solely on written sources and theoretical considerations” (Untermann 1999, 162).1 Again and again, archaeologists are amazed at “the lack of information about Carolingian Aachen” (Keller 2004, 49).2 Another decade and many excavations later, scholars lament the same early medieval void: “With the exception of the large Carolingian palace buildings, there are practically no early medieval houses” (Müller et al. 2013, 42).3 Gradually, however, the excavators are realizing that Aachen's Imperial Antiquity and Aachen's Early Middle Ages cannot have followed each other at a distance of 700 years, but must have existed simultaneously. This seems incredible. But even the floors of Charlemagne's Octagon are covered with tiles of opus sectile in the style of the 2nd century (see illustration below). Also in Ravenna, the capella arcivescovile, whose preserved remains are dated to the 8th century, has an opus sectile floor of Proconnesus marble (Deliyannis 2010, 191). Aachen's 2nd century drainage canals are so well intact that the early medieval Aacheners “tied themselves to the Roman sewer system” (Cüppers 1982, 67).4 The same applies to transport routes: “A continuous use from Roman times also applies to large parts of the inner city road and path network. […] The Roman road, which has already been documented in the Dome- Quadrum [Palatinate ensemble] in northeast-southwest orientation, was used until the late Middle Ages” (Müller et al. 2013, 324).5 1 “Erstaunlicherweise hat bislang keine Grabung oder Baustellenbeobachtung innerhalb und außerhalb der Altstadt von Aachen eindeutige Siedlungsreste karolingischer Zeit erfasst, obwohl die Überlieferung auf die Anwesenheit von Kaufleuten und zahlreichen Einwohnern sowie auf die Existenz durchaus anspruchsvoller Adelshöfe schließen lässt, von deren Gebäuden und Sachkultur einiges im Boden zu finden sein müsste. Alle bisherigen Aussagen zu Straßensystem, Siedlungsstruktur und Grenzen dieser Siedlung beruhen allein auf Schriftquellen und theoretischen Überlegungen.” 2 “die fehlenden Kenntnisse über das karolingische Aachen.” 3 “gibt es mit Ausnahme der grossen karolingerzeitlichen Pfalzbauten praktisch keine frühmittelalterlichen Häuser.” 4 “an das römische Kanalsystem anbanden.” 5 “Eine kontinuierliche Nutzung aus römischer Zeit gilt auch für weite Teile des innerörtlichen Straßen- und Wegenetzes. […] Die römische Straße, die im Dom-Quadrum [Pfalz- Ensemble] in nordost-südwestlicher Ausrichtung schon dokumentiert wurde, wurde bis in das späte Mittelalter hinein genutzt.” 71 Early 2nd century AD” Roman opus sectile floor (Córdoba.) Early 9th century AD opus sectile floor (Charlemagne’s Octagon [https://pl.pinterest.com/pin/410320216042805371/.] in Aachen. [Konnegen 2012, 442.]. Ravenna’s 8th century arcivescovile had a similar floor. It is well known that streets last a long time, while apartments wear out quickly. And yet, in Aachen one finds a repetition of the durability miracles of Spoleto or Zurich: “Essential parts of [2nd c.] Roman buildings were at least preserved in such a way that a further use for residential and other purposes was still possible in the [9th c.] Early Middle Ages” (Müller et al. 2013, 270).6 Researchers want to make sense of this strange situation. They are looking, if you will, for an analogy to Valentina Manzelli's “palimpsest” model, whereby Late Antiquity is formed out of material from Imperial Antiquity. They leave Aachen's miraculously preserved Imperial Antiquity intact, but they remove one of its blocks from the urban context, and plant Aachen's one and only piece of undisputed early medieval architecture in the vacated space: “Only the area for the large main buildings, between aula and Mary’s church [octagon], was cut out of the Roman ground plan, as it were, probably to allow the church to have an exact west-east orientation” (Müller et al. 2013, 324).7 6 “Wesentliche Teile römischer Bauten [waren] zumindest so erhalten, dass eine Weiternutzung zu Wohn- und anderen Zwecken im frühen Mittelalter noch möglich war.” 7 “Lediglich der Bereich für die großen Hauptgebäude, zwischen Königshalle und Marienkirche [Oktogon], wurde aus dem römischen Grundplan gleichsam herausgeschnitten, wohl um der Kirche die exakte West-Ost-Ausrichtung zu ermöglichen.“ 72 Aachen's expansion to include a Christian center may indeed have been carried out in this way. But when? Some 700 years after the miraculously intact Imperial Antiquity, or in its last decades? But that would only be possible if Imperial Antiquity actually belongs to the time of the Early Middle Ages. After all, the Carolingian buildings cannot simply be made 700 years older. Right after them Part of AACHEN's Roman road network in the 2nd century AD. One block (with grey structure) is cleared to accommodate Charlemagne's octagonal church which, unlike the neighboring temple [“Tempel”], is oriented east-west. The dome (“DOM”; also “Chorhalle”) is a 14th/15th century addition. [http://www.archaeologie- aachen.de/DE/Geschichte/Epochen/Roemerzeit/index.html.] There follow primitive huts of the High Middle Ages from the 10th century. They are immersed in a “'layer of mud or alluvial deposits', which here, too, overlap the purely Roman layers everywhere in great thickness” (Sage 1982, 93).8 This occurs from the “second third” of the 10th century onwards (Erkens 2013, 580), thus after the Tenth Century Collapse of the 930s AD. The fact that Imperial Antiquity coincides with the Early Middle Ages is also demonstrated by the fact that Aachen's Carolingian buildings are thoroughly antique in style and construction, and yet are found directly before the High Middle Ages of the 10th/11th century: “The Palatinate was planned as a closed complex in the sense of antique palaces and was tackled using Roman techniques” (Sage 1973, 2).9 But because modern architectural historians firmly believe that many centuries separate Imperial Antiquity from Charlemagne, they report on his buildings as if they had been created by some miracle: “The royal palaces with their halls, chapels, 8 “‘Moder- oder Schwemmschicht‘, die auch hier überall die rein römischen Schichten in großer Mächtigkeit überlagert.“ 9 “Die Pfalz war als geschlossene Anlage im Sinn antiker Paläste geplant und unter Anwendung römischer Techniken in Angriff genommen worden.“ 73 colonnades and living quarters show the same clear overall composition as the Roman palaces in the diversity of the individual buildings. [...] In solving architectural problems, the builders based themselves on the mass construction of ancient Rome with its pillars, barrel vaults or domes and its preference for axes that were perpendicular to each other, on the one hand, and on the other hand, on the column architecture developed by the Greeks” (Binding 2003, 1633 f.). 10 It is considered an even greater miracle that Aachen, despite the demise of Imperial Antiquity and Late Antiquity, has – other than Ravenna’s Agnellus – a perfect command of 1st/2nd century Latin: “All public communication – legal, religious, political or in school – takes place in Latin, no matter what language people may have spoken in private or domestic contexts. Thus Latin, in orthography and grammar of the older classical and Ciceronian norms, was indeed the lingua franca of the entire Carolingian Empire” (McKitteric 2014, 287).11 Since nobody can imagine how or why all these wonders were accomplished across eons for an unknown purpose, Carolingian Europe “looks

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